Summary:
- The US dollar had a great second quarter, will the data justify this strength?
- The NFP report should show a decent employment growth
- Only a surge in wages could trigger a major USD appreciation
The NFP report is typically heavily anticipated by traders around the globe and this time it’s going to be no different. In this analysis we crunch the NFP numbers and take a look at the 2 markets that could respond: EURUSD and US500.
The NFP report – is there a case for a stronger dollar?
The US labour market has been really strong – this is not questioned at all. Average employment growth in the past 12 months through May was at 197k, just a notch below a 200k figure for a previous such period. If anything this shows a great appetite for workers as you’d normally assume some employment growth deceleration as the unemployment rate goes down to 4%. This shows economic strength but then it’s nothing new for the markets and certainly not a reason to cheer another 200k growth. For that matter June looks to be an average month both when compared to 2011-2017 and 2001-2017 period.
Employment growth is volatile but has been very solid and June’s been traditionally a good month. Source: Macrobond, XTB Research
What is important for the Fed – and thus for the markets – is wage growth. At this stage of economic cycle wages used to grow at least at a 4% pace, not a sub-3% that is the case right now. What is more, real wage growth has been nearly non-existent during this decade except for a 2014-16 period where it’s been caused not by nominal wage growth but declining petrol prices. So from that point there’s little inflationary pressure and amid Trade Wars risks the Fed could choose to stay cautious unless it sees an acceleration in (nominal) wage growth above 3% y/y.
The US unemployment rate is at the lowest point in decades but it does not correspond with wage growth. Source: Macrobond, XTB Research
EURUSD
The pair will await the NFP reading with anxiousness. Even though we argue that a major surprise in the report is unlikely the pair still need to cement fundamentals of a recovery after it managed to defend the 1.15 support twice – first after the Italian bond mini-crisis and second after a dovish ECB. Some ECB members actually helped the euro on Wednesday by saying that waiting too long with a hike could be risky and now the pair needs a confirmation that US wage growth does not accelerate. The nearest support can be spotted at 1.1860.
EURUSD rebounded off the key support zone but we cannot be sure of a rally yet. Source: xStation5
US500
Wall Street has been remarkably resilient to the Trade Wars risks and the US500 managed to stay within the upwards channel and above the 2700 support zone. We can actually see some lower shades on a D1 candles and at this point it looks as the support has been defended. The US equity market traditionally reacted in a positive way to solid employment growth accompanied by a modest wage growth.
US500 managed to defend the key support line and stays in the channel. Source: xStation5